In their simplicity is their poignancy. On August 7, 1865, Mary
Louisa Black noted in her journal that they were “nooning on a nice
stream in a valey in the mountains.” A day later she observed that
one of the men in the overland expedition had “buried an infant
here yesterday—still born.” One can only imagine her emotional
turmoil—she had buried her own daughter three months earlier, just
as she and her husband set out for Oregon. While each diarist and
letter-writer had her personal joys and sorrows, collectively these
invaluable accounts demonstrate the passion and courage of these
nineteenth-century pioneering women who led and followed their
families into the West, pursuing dreams of better economic or
social situations. One can only marvel at their ability to
persevere under conditions that sent many scurrying back home to
the East.